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I'm a black ex-cop, and this is the real truth about race and policing

16 pointsby teslacarabout 8 years ago

3 comments

Svexarkabout 8 years ago
Virtually everybody has a friend of a friend who ran into a cop who lied or abused them. It&#x27;s foolish to inject race into the discussion of police abuse. A lot more people would support reform if the discussion wasn&#x27;t narrowed to just police abuse of minorities.<p>The real cause of the problem is that many communities are racially segregated and that we don&#x27;t require police officers to live in the communities they police. It causes cops to police neighborhoods like troops occupying a foreign country with restless natives.<p>If we want to get serious about stopping this we should 1) outlaw gentrification and lower property taxes so that poor people aren&#x27;t forced to live apart from everyone else 2) outlaw any zoning laws that affect the income levels of communities 3) provide police officers with a home in the community they police and require them to live there with their families. Also, put a body cam on every police officer and have an independent quality assurance department to conduct random reviews.
Pica_soOabout 8 years ago
I had some conversations with police officers in my country, and to be off the books honest- they feel like the blacks of white society- means just useful enough to keep failed social experiments, ignored social problems and even problems created by delusional politicians under the lid. Once a certain threshold is reached, the escalation from both sides in a community (unemployed youth vs the police) takes on a dynamic of its own. Even a idealistic officer could spend a generation working in such a environment - achieving near to nothing.<p>As David Brin said it. Put Cameras on everybody, its our best shot. Its utterly horrible, but its our best shot. Also, having seen some speakers on conferences, i would demand a equal push towards a peace and prosperity development from the policed communities. And no excuses there either. You need next to nothing today, to learn and develop. You need very cheap hardware (even a smartphone can do it). You need the web. You need the believe that you can accomplish this and see it through.<p>I remember, reading a GFX programmers short-bio on some webpage. He basically grew up in a ghetto, did spend most of his time indoors and developed his skills until he became a great shader programmer. If i remember correctly, he ended up working for valve.<p>If there was some program like the worldvision to provide a mentor-ship towards a pupil willing to walk this road (including comp-replacement-insurance and legal-insurance to escape harassment) - that would be great. Big problem seems also to provide a social environment with escape velocity.
burntrelish1273about 8 years ago
Michael A. Wood Jr.&#x27;s story [0] is salient, as is his one of his proposed partial solutions to meaningful police culture reform: open, civilian governance. [1]<p>0: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;youtu.be&#x2F;u5nPyf-0UMc" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;youtu.be&#x2F;u5nPyf-0UMc</a><p>1: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;youtu.be&#x2F;FZIrIMppCrg" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;youtu.be&#x2F;FZIrIMppCrg</a>